One jaunt into the Mirror Universe was quite enough. Everything after "Mirror, Mirror" was tiresome, self-indulgent dross. I'm glad TNG avoided falling into that trap.
Except Moriarty. The best Sherlock so far...None of the other alternate universes depicted in TNG ever caught on enough or distinguished themself by particular characteristics enough to get their own name.
It's the kind of society Kirk would have scolded for rejecting what it means to be alive.
Does that mean anything though? The only one that really got exploration was "Yesterday's Enterprise" and that stopped existing at story's end, and yet is pretty well known. The only others are "Parallels" and the point there was those universes aren't that different from ours and they got all of five minutes exploration anyway. If they had full episodes they would probably get names too.None of the other alternate universes depicted in TNG ever caught on enough or distinguished themself by particular characteristics enough to get their own name.
For someone who claims to not have read the book, you are remarkably close:Funny you should mention this... while I've never actually read it (cue Lily from First Contact LOL) in the novel of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, there is a "new human" movement mentioned to be taking shape in the civilian populace of Earth. These new humans resemble strongly the humans of the 24th century, a more evolved society, and Admiral Kirk makes a point to criticize this movement at one point, then introspectively wonders if maybe they are right after all and he's just too set in his ways to understand it.
For anyone who's actually read the TMP novelization, please tell me if I got that right or not.
I still wonder whether the Mirror Universe is just another parallel reality like the ones seen in Parallels, or has a different connection to Prime Reality altogether.
Imho, every show that includes parallel universes requires at least one dedicated Mirror Universe episode.
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After how DS9 used then went overboard with it, I'm glad they didn't for TNG.
VOY did a better job at "make 'em evil" and without the cliche of "parallel universe" as the reason. At least twice.
One jaunt into the Mirror Universe was quite enough. Everything after "Mirror, Mirror" was tiresome, self-indulgent dross. I'm glad TNG avoided falling into that trap.
Imho, every show that includes parallel universes requires at least one dedicated Mirror Universe episode.
Probably didn't think it was necessary. Yesterday's Enterprise did essentially the same thing, only instead of evil versions of the Enterprise D crew we saw a darker more overtly militaristic version. What else could an MU version do that wouldn't feel like a retread of that?
DS9 did it excellently the first time, but that's where it needed to stop.
But wasn't it cleverly subversive to show the Terran Empire had fallen and was replaced by just another evil empire?I disagree on this point. DS9 should not have done it at all, or at least not linked their alternate universe version to the TOS MU. Because their version was a complete bastardization of what was shown in "Mirror Mirror."
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